N.F.L. Players Push Back Against Jerry Jones on Anthem Issue

With less than a week until the N.F.L. preseason begins, the league’s policy on what players must do during the playing of “The Star-Spangled Banner” is in more flux than ever as players sounded off Friday against Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones’s demand that his players stand for the anthem.

Jones’s pronouncement this week followed the league’s announcement that it was putting on hold a revised policy. That plan would obligate players on the field to stand at attention but provide the option of remaining in the locker room. The league is trying to negotiate another revision to the policy with the N.F.L. Players Association.

Jones said that all his players must stand on the field, and cannot remain in the locker room, which threw a wrench into the already fraught talks.

Jones’s son, Stephen, went further on Thursday, suggesting that the Cowboys would cut any player who disobeyed the team’s policy.

President Trump, who has repeatedly attacked the league and owners for not dismissing players who protest during the anthem, congratulated Jones for taking a hard line. “Way to go Jerry,” Trump wrote on Twitter on Friday morning. “This is what the league should do!”

The players, who are loath to give up what many see as their right to speak freely in a public square, say they are not protesting the national anthem, but trying to raise awareness about police brutality toward African Americans and other forms of social injustice.

With the discord rising, N.F.L. executives, owners and the union are meeting Friday in hopes of finding yet another solution. Jones’s stance, though, has led one of the participants in those talks, Russell Okung, an offensive lineman with the Los Angeles Chargers and a member of the N.F.L. Players Association executive committee, to question whether the league is negotiating in good faith.

In a series of tweets published late Thursday, and in an email exchange on Friday, Okung asked whether negotiations could be meaningful if owners like Jones set their own policies that contradicted the league’s stance. He wondered also whether the N.F.L. was negotiating for public relations purposes.

“If the line in the sand has been drawn, are we really meeting in good faith or for the league’s need for a faith performative sound bite?” he wrote.

In an email on Friday, Okung clarified his views.

“I want to remain optimistic while continually pointing to reality,” he wrote. “In this case, the announced policy of the Cowboys contradicts the announced policy of the league. That needs to be reconciled.”

Okung said the league should stop trying to please President Trump. While he considers Jones an outlier “when it comes to his behavior and his antics and desire to appease Trump,” ultimately, “most owners quietly agree with his position,” he wrote.

He said that most players agree with Kenny Stills, a wide receiver on the Miami Dolphins, who said the league doesn’t need an anthem policy, and that players should be able to do what they want. Though meetings with so many busy people are difficult to arrange, Friday’s talks were complicated because so many players, including Okung, were back in training camp.

Still, Okung said he was hopeful that something positive would come from the meeting. What that might be, he did not say.

The Players Association has told the N.F.L. that it will fight what it sees as limits on the right to free speech at every turn and will not begin talks on a new Collective Bargaining Agreement if the league tries unilaterally to enforce a policy the players have not approved.